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Hominid Evolution in Context

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Presentation on theme: "Hominid Evolution in Context"— Presentation transcript:

1 Hominid Evolution in Context
Ancient hominid fossils not accepted as ancestors Biases in fossil record (from 19th century): Fossil remains of species not that old (Homo erectus & Neanderthal) Found in Asia and Europe Had relatively large brains Cultural biases: Big brains, intelligence emphasized Resistance to ancestors with primitive features Resistance to Africa as cradle of humankind Humans viewed as unique (culturally & biologically)

2 Hominid Evolution in Context
Occurs in a series of ADAPTIVE RADIATIONS The evolution & spreading out of related species into new environmental niches What “ingredients” are needed for natural selection/evolution to work?

3 Will the Earliest Hominid Please Stand Up?
Earliest representatives of our lineage lived at end of Miocene & beginning of Pliocene epoch 6 – 4.5 mya

4 Geological Context of Hominid Sites
South African Sites Mostly limestone (no volcanic sediments) Cave sites with bone accumulations Dated with biostratigraphy & paleomagnetism East African Sites Volcanic ash/sediments Can be dated by Argon/Argon (chronometric) dating, relative dating techniques (stratigraphy) & paleomagnetism

5 First Adaptive Radiation
Late Miocene (6-7 mya) Produces potential/possible LAST COMMON ANCESTORS These are the earliest (possible) Hominids Forest adapted

6 Sahelanthropus tchadensis
Found in central Africa, country of Chad 7 myo Nearly complete cranium Mix of human & ape-like traits Small braincase: cc Massively built, heavy browridges, crest in back, large muscle attachments Reduced upper canine Small, vertical face Cannot determine bipedality OLDEST possible hominid Common ancestor?

7 Orrorin tugenensis aka “Millenium Man”
Discovered: in western Kenya Age range: 6 mya Remains: Fragmentary arm & thigh bones; lower jaws & teeth Features: Limb bones larger than later hominid species Cranial capacity: Not yet determined

8 Orrorin tugenensis, cont.
Notes: Some evidence of bipedality & tree climbing; dental & some skeletal features more human than ape like Significance: More evidence that bipedalism may have originated in the trees

9 Second Adaptive Radiation
Early Pliocene (4-5 mya) New species & new genus evolves Dense forest environment All exhibit bipedalism – established hominids Represent a challenge to the established “Savanna Hypothesis”

10 Ardipithecus ramidus Discovered: in Ethiopia by various research teams Age range: mya Features: most complete ancient hominid skeleton – bones of hand, feet, limbs, pelvis, most of skull & teeth; remains of males, females, juveniles

11 A. ramidus, cont. Ape-like traits
Grasping big toe (only biped w/ this feature) Long arms, short legs Small brain Human-like traits: Small canines Small molars Hand bones NOT adapted for knuckle-walking

12 Ardipithecus ramidus Diet: omnivorous - plants, fruits, insects, nuts, seeds Environment: lush woodlands, forests Significance: 1 my older than Lucy Closest established hominid to Last Common Ancestor with chimps Arboreal AND Bipedal Adaptations


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